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Improved soil-crop system management aids in NH3 emission mitigation in China.

Authors :
Sha, Zhipeng
Liu, Hejing
Wang, Jingxia
Ma, Xin
Liu, Xuejun
Misselbrook, Tom
Source :
Environmental Pollution; Nov2021, Vol. 289, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

High ammonia (NH 3) emissions from fertilized soil in China have led to various concerns regarding environmental safety and public health. In response to China's blue skies protection campaign, effective NH 3 reduction measures need to consider both mitigation efficiency and food security. In this context, we conducted a meta-analysis (including 2980 observations from 447 studies) to select effective measures based on absolute (AV) and yield-scaled (YSAV) NH 3 volatilization reduction potential, with the aim of establishing a comprehensive NH 3 mitigation framework covering various crop production sectors, and offering a range of potential solutions. The results showed that manipulating crop density, using an intermittent irrigation regime for paddy field rice, applying N as split applications or partially substituting inorganic fertilizer N with organic N sources could achieve reductions in AV and YSAV reduction of 10–20 %; adopting drip irrigation regimes, adding water surface barrier films to paddy fields, or using double inhibitor (urease and nitrification), slow-release or biofertilizers could achieve 20–40 % mitigation; plastic film mulching, applying fertilizer by irrigation or using controlled-release fertilizers could yield 40–60 % reduction; use of a urease inhibitor, fully substituting fertilizer N with organic N, or applying fertilizer by deep placement could decrease AV and YSAV by over 60 %. In addition, use of soil amendments, applying suitable inorganic N sources, or adopting crop rotation, intercropping or a rice-fish production model all had significant benefits to control AV. The adoption of any particular strategy should consider local accessibility and affordability, direct intervention by local/government authorities and demonstration to encourage the uptake of technologies and practices, particularly in NH 3 pollution hotspot areas. Together, this could ensure food security and environmental sustainability. [Display omitted] • A comprehensive NH 3 mitigation framework for various crop production sectors was established. •Improved field and nutrient management reduces both NH 3 and yield-scaled NH 3 emissions. •Diversified cropping systems provide ecological options of controlling agricultural NH 3 loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02697491
Volume :
289
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Environmental Pollution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152555849
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117844